Tatiana Feodorovna (Ingrid of Norway)

Tatiana Feodorovna (Russian: Татьяна Фёдоровна, romanized: Tat'yana Fyodorovna; 27 August [O.S. 15 August] 1898 – 13 October 1999), known before her marriage as Lady Ingrid Løvenskiold, was a Norwegian noblewoman who became Empress of Vaisey as spouse of Emperor Alexander V (reigned 1917-1999). She was the only surviving child and eldest daughter to be born out of a union between the head of the Løvenskiold family and the Greek Goddess; Hera (the Queen of the Heavens), making her a stepdaughter of Zeus (King of the Gods and Hera`s legal husband). Her immortal half-siblings included Angelos, Ares, Eileithyia, Enyo, Eris, Hebe and Hephaestus, while her few mortal half-siblings included the likes of painters and people close to the Norwegian royal family. Her eldest child and heir apparent - Empress Nicole I of Vaisey became the new ruler of the Empire upon the death of her husband in 1999. She then became known as the Empress Mother; as she was the mother of a reigning empress. She was the sister-in-law of the late Empress Alexei Alexandrovna, with the two women being bitter rivals for the affections of the common people of the Vaisey Empire.

Appearance and personality
Tatiana was known for her striking beauty. Even her bitter rival; Empress Alexei Alexandrovna said that Tatiana was "a gem of a beauty" and commented favorably on her "splendid dark eyes." Her fiancée Tsesarevich Alexander Alexandrovich was enthusiastic about her beauty. He wrote to his mother that "her beauty is so striking; she looks vaguely similar to our beloved Tsarina." When she was tsarevna, Thomas W. Knox met her during a social gathering and wrote quite favorably on her beauty, comparing to that of the late Tsarina; which reportably infuriated the late Empresses` children who considered her to only to be a "mere" noblewoman rather than the next consort of the Empire. He wrote that Tatiana was "strikingly beautiful and less inclined to fierceness than the late Empress, she does not display the same nerves of steel that the Empress had in spades and the harsh seriousness with which she carried herself with." He also commented favorably on "her clear and unclouded dark eyes that reflected the emotions buried in her soul."

Like Alexei, Tatiana was intelligent, with both of the Empresses being considered the smartest consorts of their time in the entirety of the Vaisey Empire. When considering Tatiana for her sixth son Alfred, Prince of